Alternative
Medicine
We have made great strides in developing western medicine
in the last century. Countless diseases were eliminated or controlled through advances in
immunology, parasitology, and the discovery of antibiotic drugs and vitamins; the advances
in surgery made possible by antiseptics and anesthesia; and the discovery of insulin and
human growth hormones. From pacemakers to birth control plus, from kidney transplants to
artificial hearts, America has an international reputation for making medical
breakthroughs. This, however has come at a cost. Modern medicine has raised expectations
of people on the capabilities of the medicine. We have stopped taking an active part in
our own healing. We trust the doctor to take care of us. Doctors, on the other hand, are
very busy. They spent more time filling up insurance forms, documenting case histories to
ward of any potential malpractice suits or for meeting the "quality assurance
requirements", peer reviews and other formalities that takes away the time available
to practice medicine. Health care administration is reviewing the "productivity"
of physicians and the only yardstick they can use to measure the performance of a doctor
is how many patients he or she has seen or what is the "billable hours". Among
all these high technology shuffle, a fundamental factor that distinguished the healing
profession from the time of Hypocrites has changed. Hypocrites viewed the treatment of
disease as a dual process. One part was represented by systematic medicine; the other part
was the full activation of the patient's own healing system. In the centuries since the
great physician taught his students under the sycamore tree on the Greek island of Kos,
there has been a shift away from the concept of the patient as the center of the healing
process. The physician has come increasingly to the fore as the dominant force.
The family doctor of a century ago was really a holistic
doctor. He knew three generations of the family, and he knew that the mother's diabetes
got worse when the teenager acted up. He saw the big picture. That's something
conventional medicine has definitely lost. Family physicians, with their waiting rooms
full of patients, claim that they simply do not have the time to give their full attention
to patients as people, and that even if they had, many of them would be surprised, even
irritated, if questioned about, say, their diet or their love life. Patients come to their
doctors for tonics or tranquilizers, not for analysis.
Conventional medicine offers little for those suffering
from back pain, arthritis, the effects of stress, and other chronic ailments such as
cancer and AIDS. High-tech medicine is very expensive. It can also be dangerous. Its
methods are potent and invasive, and it is frequently harmful. This tendency is nowhere
more evident than in the amount of drug toxicity caused by modern prescribing practices.
Adverse drug reactions are now so common that most patients will experience one sooner or
later. The problem is that most pharmaceutical drugs are too strong.
The landscape is changing, though. Many have turning to
ancient healing arts for an answer. Stone Age cave dwellers dug for medicinal plants, and
the healing repertoire of the Egyptians included herbal remedies for crocodile bites. The Ayurvedic texts of ancient India are replete with
magical treatments, botanical drugs, and charms designed to vanquish demons. Ayurvedic
text written 5000 years ago, contain references to hardening of the arteries and
recommended healing herbs to combat the problem. The Chinese, who discovered smallpox
immunization a thousand years before Europeans did, saw man as a mirror of the universe,
infused with qi, vital energy that courses through channels in the body. Surgery began in
prehistoric times: ancient Peruvians cut holes in the skulls of the living to provide
disease with an avenue of escape.
In much of the world, Western medicine is too expensive, is
unavailable, or is presented in a way that is inconsistent with traditional beliefs. There
is an increasing sense that certain ancient and esoteric healing practices, long ignored
by Western science, may in fact represent profound insights into the very nature of
well-being.
Worldwide, only an estimated 10 percent to 30 percent of
human health care is delivered by conventional, biomedically oriented practitioners. The
remaining 70 percent to 90 percent ranges from self-care according to folk principles to
care given in an organized health care system based on an alternative tradition or
practice. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 4 billion people, 80 percent
of the world population, presently use herbal medicine for some aspect of primary health
care.
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